10 Last Words of a Dying Church

“If you don’t like change, you‘re going to like irrelevance even less.”

I originally wrote this post in April 2012. However, in the last week it has gone viral primarily through Facebook. Therefore, since the message has incredible relevance to ministry today, I am re-releasing this post with some updated information. Get ready to be challenged.

There are few things as sad as watching a once great church grow old, become irrelevant, and slowly die. What is worse is that they either don’t know they’re dying or they simply don’t care as long as those remaining are happy. Sadly, I have witnessed this more times than I wish to count. In addition, I have attended this type of church before.

Here is what I have noticed about many of these churches – at a pivotal point, a decision was made to continue doing ministry the way they always have rather than alter their approach to reach a changing community or the next generation. After months of committee meetings and off-line conversations, the church finally utters the The 10 Last Words Of Dying Churches – “We’ve never done it that way before. We’re not changing.”

Those 10 powerful words subsequently have a ripple effect that lasts generations. As a result, the following are additional comments those attending these churches are bound to say and/or hear shortly thereafter:

“Isn’t it great that our music is never too loud?”

“Isn’t it nice seeing people in coats and ties and not disrespecting God by wearing jeans and shorts?”

“We’re more spiritual and doctrinally pure than that fast-growing, watered-down gospel, baptizing-hundreds–maybe-thousands-every-year church down the street.”

“Can you believe that church is stealing all our young people?”

“I hear we’re having to cut the budget because giving is not what it used to be.”